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- List (Unformatted): INFO-MAC DIGEST V6 #56
-
-
- INFO-MAC Digest Sunday, 5 Jun 1988 Volume 6 : Issue 56
-
- Today's Topics:
- Mac II WishList Summary
-
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Date: Fri 20 May 88 11:14:49-PDT
- From: Ken Laws <LAWS@IU.AI.SRI.COM>
- Subject: Mac II WishList Summary
-
- Wow. You (we?) Info-Mac readers really come through! I'd like to
- thank Godfrey DiGiorgi, Christopher Chow, Fernando Pereira, Rick
- Light, Steve Weyer, Joe McMahon, Josh Hayes, Anselmo Lastra,
- George McKee, Keith Kutner, Jay Garvin, Felix Ingrand, Steve
- Buyske, David Oster, Leo Geoffrion, Anders (OK2ANDER), Barry
- Semo, Freek Wiedijk, Bill Bumgarner, Woody Yeung, Alan Larson,
- Mike Donegan, Les LaCroix, Sorrel Jakins, Lee Thomison, Herb
- Barad, Mike Linnig, Jeffrey Sullivan, Miguel%cs.umass.edu,
- Miguel Cruz, and Martin Minow for their help. I've also included
- information from info-mac and from magazine reviews in the following.
-
- As some of you suspected, my budget won't really cover all the
- software packages I mentioned. Neither do I have time to learn
- them all at once. Your suggestions will help me buy the most
- useful ones first; I can then wait for improved versions of the
- others. However, I do want to get enough software functionality
- to justify the expense of the hardware. It's kind of like buying
- landscaping with a new house: the cost isn't so painful when it's
- expressed as a percentage of a larger system price.
-
- I asked about a home/family system, but with software development
- and data analysis tools so that I could ply my research trade.
- (Carpenters, lawyers, and truckers own their own tools -- why not
- programmers and scientists?) Here's what I've gotten so far:
-
- Hardware:
- The Macs aren't sensitive to power-line problems. If power
- fluctuations are bad enough to affect the peripherals, I should get
- the best power conditioning short of uninteruptable -- about $120.
-
- ThunderScan is a toy. Granted, but that's good enough for scanning
- in my kids' pictures. (Most expensive OCR systems don't work very well
- either.) I'll have the ImageWriter anyway, so the cost is reasonable.
- No one commented on Read-It!TS; I presume it reads only simple fonts.
-
- Several people pointed out that I'll want more memory if I'm
- going to run HyperCard, MultiFinder, and all those statistical
- packages and other programs, not to mention storing scanned images.
- Yes, but I'll wait for memory prices to decrease and for my bank
- balance to bounce back. I would have gotten the 80Mb internal
- disk, but Apple didn't offer it with the 2Mb bundle.
-
- Communication:
- VersaTerm is just about everyone's favorite, although the documentation
- is very poor. MicroPhone II was also suggested; it runs modem or
- kermit protocols in the background under MultiFinder. RedRyder works
- now, although somewhat clumsily, but the company has offended a lot
- of users. I presume that a macro package like Tempo II or even QuicKeys
- can match RedRyder's macros. MacKermit is free (e.g., from KERMSRV@CUVMA).
- MacTerminal (or the MacTerminal protocol in VersaTerm?) is useful with
- macput and macget for file transfers from Unix systems, but is annoyingly
- slow to exit. Freeterm (from SUMEX-AIM) was suggested, as was Pacer's pcLink.
- Mac240 was suggested as a VT200 emulator. I have no need of InTalk or TOPS;
- I think the same is true of SmartCom II. AlisaTalk was recommended for
- for Ethernet communication with Vax VMS.
-
- StuffIt is essential. I get the impression that it includes PackIt III
- and BinHex 4.0 capabilities; if not, SUMEX should have the code. (By the
- way, PackIt III does work on the II.) StuffIt 1.31 may be preferable
- to 1.40. I may also want Microfilm Reader, free from Buck, Wheat and
- Associates (1601 Weatherstone Dr., Blue Springs, MD 64015, (816) 229-5632).
- I'm not sure what program I need for manipulating Arpanet mail files
- that I've archived.
-
- Word Processing:
- Everyone says WordPerfect is good, although initially buggy
- (essentially a beta release!), but that FullWrite Professional
- is better. I'll reconsider. I tend to prefer anything written
- for the Mac to lowest-common-denominator software ported from
- other machines. I'm also wary of PC-style software because the
- color selections and artistic choices tend to be mediocre.
- On the other hand, I'm told that the initial FullWrite release
- is slow and includes some poor formatting features. Either editor
- will have a text-only option, and can thus be used for coding.
-
- Other editors such as MacWrite 5.0, WriteNow, and Word were suggested
- as perfectly adequate for ordinary use. JOVE and microEMACS are for
- those who can't break old habits. QUED is OK, but the simple editors
- that come with MPW, Lightspeed C, TEXtures, and other programs
- are good for most code editing and file hacking. There are some
- DA editors that sound useful: McSink 4.3, SEdit, PowerEdit, etc.
- Laser Author is for people who need to put graphics in their text.
-
- Expressionist 1.11 is better than MacEQN, although getting all
- the small fonts for nested sub/superscripting can be a pain.
- There's also something called MathType ($149 list) for graphic
- constuction of equations (with TEX interface capability), but I
- haven't checked out the April Macworld review.
-
- TEXtures with LaTex is pretty good, for those who can stand it,
- but the lack of BibTex macros has users upset. It is possible
- to use HyperCard for generating bibliographies.
-
- No one commented on Document Compare or any utility similar to
- Unix diff or Twenex srccom. Perhaps this comes with one of the
- common utility packages.
-
- Spelling:
- Spellswell and Coach are good, but new editor formats might be a problem.
- WordPerfect comes with its own speller and thesarus anyway. (I'll bet
- FullWrite does too.)
-
- Graphics:
- Everyone has a favorite. I've already ordered the Claris
- MacPaint 2.0 and MacDraw, as I mentioned, and will probably upgrade
- them to the II versions. Those, plus my editor, should handle
- my document production needs -- at least until I can afford a laser
- printer. Other recommended packages are CricketDraw, FullPaint, and
- SuperPaint. PixelPaint and Modern Artist are probably overkill.
- There's no question that SuperPaint is a bargain, although it doesn't
- handle color. Canvas is buggy, but some people like it. CricketDraw
- also has some bugs. My kids would probably enjoy Crystal Paint or
- KaleidaGraph.
-
- ImageStudio is mainly for high-res retouching of scanned images;
- I presume it works on the Mac II. I'll wait for Digital Darkroom
- ($295 list) to come out this June. I hear that both developers are
- planning extensions to color imagery. There's also a new MacImage 2.0,
- but for $495 I'm not likely to find out what it does. I'll certainly
- get SmartScrap/The Clipper and SuperGlue. Obviously ThunderScan comes
- with something like the Giffer display program archived at Sumex.
-
- I haven't investigated graphic databases yet, although WetPaint looks
- like a good starter set. I'll get used to the fonts I have, or can
- get free, before investing in something garish like World-Class Fonts
- or Fluent Fonts 2.0. The Font Preview stack on SUMEX looks like
- a good utility for checking out freeware fonts.
-
- No one commented on Curator (II-compatible?) or PictureBase 1.2 for
- indexing clip art. DAZZL makes something called ClipArt+. The WetPaint
- database comes with the excellent Art Roundup browser DA; should I also
- get WetPaint's PictureBase option for $15 extra?
-
- Slides:
- MORE 1.1c is a good program and can be used for color presentations,
- but I can get by with just my editor and graphics program --
- at least until MORE 2.0 comes out in a few months. I don't know how
- the Acta DA compares with More. PowerPoint is popular with some, but
- pricey; it does include SmartScrap though. Cricket Presents is
- good for making slides. VideoWorks II is popular for preparing
- animated educational materials; it might be a good educational toy
- for my kids, especially with the VideoWorks HyperCard Driver.
-
- Publishing:
- PageMaker 3.0 is the standard in page layout, and therefore talks
- to everything else. ReadySetGo! 4.0 is smaller and easier to use.
- (Quark XPress is a more powerful -- and expensive -- program.)
- I really don't need any of these, at least until I have a PostScript
- laser printer. I only need Glue (e.g., with MicroPhone II) and
- SuperGlue for tying graphics and word processing programs together.
-
- No one offered information about Trapeze 2.0, which is a new combination
- spreadsheet and presentation program. I think that means you can build
- formulas into your formatted document instead of copying data from a
- separate spreadsheet. The program has an abundance of functions and graph
- formats, but is somewhat weaker than Excel on date functions. Anyway,
- I don't really need a spreadsheet or grapher. If I did, I would also
- take a serious look at Parameter Manager Plus (II-compatible?), Cricket
- Graph, or the statistics programs.
-
- PosterMaker Plus from Strider Software sounds like a winner
- for those of us with kids and without laser printers. It's one
- way to get fancy fonts and layouts, as well as banners. I've
- forgotten where I read about it; probably last week's MacWeek.
-
- Databases:
- HyperDA is too limited. HyperCard 1.2 is in, although I'm going to wish I
- had a 5Mb machine. I did get a recommendation of DAZZL's Organizer+
- [from one of the developers]. Microsoft File is OK for simple lists.
- I don't know anything about FileMaker Plus yet (except that it's due for
- upgrade to version 4 in late May), or Focal Point, QuickDEX, Record
- Holder Plus, or the ArchiText that's under development.
-
- I'll just stick with HyperCard and vanilla text files for now. (After all,
- that's why word processors have search commands.) Some utilities for
- locating files by their contents are Findswell (a bit slow), Sonar 4.5,
- and the new Gofer. The latter two offer boolean search connectives.
-
- No one commented on Reports for HyperCard. I haven't seen a review,
- but it looks like a useful tool. I'll skip HyperBook Maker. STAX
- offers some utilities -- HyperCard Helper and HyperCard Sound Effects
- Studio -- that look interesting.
-
- Professional Bibliographic System is clumsy (and expensive). I'll
- stick with HyperCard and/or LaTeX until something better comes along.
- No word yet on Publish or Perish.
-
- Statistics:
- StatWorks plus CricketGraph is a good low-cost statistical system.
- Systat is complex, fully loaded; I might need more disk space if I wanted
- to use it for serious data analysis. There was a review of StatView II in
- a recent issue of Macintosh Today (that I haven't seen). All of the above
- plus Stat80, Statfast, Statpack, TrueStat, and WormStat were reviewed by
- R.S. Lehman in Statistics on the Macintosh, Byte, July 87, pp. 207-214.
- MacSpin 1.11 does work on the II, but is highly specialized. StatSoft has
- just announced the MacSS statistical system with a "limited time" price of
- $119; I don't know how it compares to the others. DataDesk Professional
- may also be out soon.
-
- I didn't ask for a discussion of equation solvers and numerical analysis
- programs like Eureka, Math View Professional, and Numerical Methods
- Tool Box. I hear that Mathematica (similar to SMP) is coming out, and so
- is a derivative of the APL language. I presume that dozens of companies
- are wrapping Mac interfaces around existing scientific packages.
-
- Programming:
- The large MPW environment comes highly recommended. Lightspeed C 2.15
- (upgraded from 2.01) is a worthwhile addition if I do much C coding,
- especially if the promised version 3 has a debugger. Otherwise the TMON
- debugger is an essential tool, although MacBugs is OK. The Programmer's
- Extenders libraries are reported to be useful, but I won't need the CAPPs
- unless I have to write editor interfaces. I don't need the MDS 68000
- Development System since these other environments include assemblers.
- I don't know anything about the ExperTelligence development environment.
-
- ResEdit is essential. MacNosy was mentioned only as a way of
- getting around copy protection, and MacZap is much cheaper for that.
- (I think this is also a function of Hard Disk Util, but I was told
- that I wouldn't need it. I don't grok CP patches and backups yet.)
-
- Eventually I'll want to acquire software written in C or for C programmers,
- such as C++, RuleC, CLIPS, or microART. There's a world of C code out there.
- I'll have to come up with the application before investing in the tools --
- but isn't it funny how much easier it is to do things the other way 'round?
-
- Allegro CommonLisp looks good, although it can't yet build standalone
- applications. I'm told that a $99 subset called Pearl is comming out.
- ExperCommonLisp, which lacks typecasting, also comes in two versions; the
- $800 one can build applications. ISI Grapher is available for the Mac II
- with either supplier's product.
- No comments on Prologs. One user of Terrapin Logo said
- he had been happy with it, and MacLogo was mentioned.
-
-
- AAIS Prolog seems to be the default, although other Prologs have
- specific advantages. AAIS can run APES, Augmented Prolog for Expert
- Systems, but I don't know whether that's worth doing.
-
- One respondent expressed satisfaction with Terrapin Logo. I have no
- reason to fault ExperLogo, MacLogo, or Object Logo. Terrapin does
- offer some hooks to other languages.
-
- APDA's unsupported $75 Smalltalk was also suggested, although the
- documentation is very poor. Parc Place markets a better Smalltalk,
- but at $1295 -- so get the 90% educational discount or forget it.
-
- My kids will probably not be programming in C or Lisp for a long time.
- ZBasic is OK, although it can be crashed. (The converter I mentioned
- translates MS Basic syntax into ZBasic.) Unfortunately, Basic is known
- to cause brain damage. HyperTalk is probably the best programming entry
- for the kids.
-
- I've seen rumors of a HyperCard Construction Kit and a HyperEngine
- Development Kit for those wanting to build on HyperTalk. I've already
- mentioned the STAX utilities. There is also an expert-system shell
- called MacSMARTS ($195 list) that links to HyperCard.
-
- Utilities:
- The most highly recommended utilities are QuicKeys, DiskFit, Disk Express,
- MacZap, FEdit Plus (available as shareware), Suitcase or Font/DA
- Juggler Plus, and PowerStation. People don't seem to have Stepping Out II
- yet, but at least there were no negative comments. (It does slow some
- programs.) QuicKeys needs a 256K disk cache under MultiFinder to avoid a
- disk read on program switch. Some people prefer Tempo II for setting up
- macro sequences and Icon-It! for accessing them. Other programs that were
- praised are MockPackage+, DiskTop, Fkey Manager, and QuickFolder (shareware
- INIT). I don't need Copy II Mac (with MacTools) or Hard Disk Util.
- No one commented on Disk Ranger, Battery Pak, Disk Quick, Front Desk, or
- Top Desk, or contradicted my statement that Sidekick 2.0 won't work on the II.
-
- I'm starting to get a handle on all the disk utilities, although there
- is so much functional overlap between packages that no single system
- dominates. Someone should put all the best utilities in one package.
- Maybe they have: Symantec has just announced Symantec Utilities for
- Macintosh, or SUM, for June 9 shipment at $99.95 (or $30 upgrade from
- MacZap). This includes Guardian (some kind of disk index that allows
- quick crash recovery), HD TuneUp for disk compaction, Symantec Tools
- for data viewing and editing, QuickCopy for floppy duplication, HD
- Partition for speed and partition locking, HD Recover for crash recovery,
- and a utility for virus protection. Also a coupon for a free
- HFS Navigator or Laserspeed to the first 5,000 buyers. Call
- (800) 888-0866 ext. 751M, or (408) 446-994 for MacZap upgrade.
-
- SUM aside, the following functional groupings seem reasonable.
- For backups, DiskFit 1.4 is the only way to go. FlashBack was suggested
- as a useful complement to DiskFit backups, and HFS Backup was mentioned.
- StuffIt is also useful for archiving.
-
- For disk compaction, Disk Express is the premier product.
-
- MacZap 5.0 with Disc Clinic is the leading disk repair utility (and
- the basis of the SUM utility). Other good tools are in Battery Pak (which
- includes Disk Tools), Disk First Aid, Fedit Plus, and MackPackage+.
-
- There are a number of good packages for keeping track of disk files
- and printing labels. Disk Ranger seems to be a favorite, but Disk
- Quick (formerly Disk Librarian), Disk Info (shareware), and MacDisk
- Catalog II 2.11 are also good. As with most of the utilities, I
- don't know which of these are II-compatible, but anything that doesn't
- use real-time graphics or elaborate sounds is probably OK.
-
- There is quite a selection of finders, launchers, folder utilities, etc.
- PowerStation and Suitcase are highly regarded. HFS Navigator may have
- some advantages over PowerStation, and Font/DA Juggler Plus has at least
- a sound utility that Suitcase lacks. MenuFonts 2 is handy for displaying
- font names in their own styles. Other programs (about which I know
- little) are DiskTop, Fkey Manager, HFS Locator Plus, Launcher FKey (freeware),
- QuickFolder, and TopDesk. MultiSet 2.0 is a way of keeping multiple
- environments active.
-
- People seem to like QuicKeys for organizing all this power. Icon-It!
- is another approach, and one can get Icon Maker or the Color Icon Editor
- (on SUMEX) for designing new icons. Tempo II is a useful macro system.
- I've forgotten what On Cue and SoundMaster do.
-
- Other useful utilities are Stepping Out II for increasing screen size,
- Smart Alarms for appointment notifications, and RamDisk+ 2.07 for
- speed (at the risk of losing data during a crash).
-
- MacSafe seems pretty straightforward; either you want to lock files or you
- don't. Sentinal more expensive, presumably more elaborate. NightWatch
- locks up the entire system, as do the LockOut utility that comes with
- MenuFonts and the Hard Disk Password program at SUMEX. 'NCryptor is the
- best of the commercial encryption packages, but there's plenty of freeware
- for encrypting files.
-
- No one commented on the II-in-a-Mac software Apple II emulator, so I
- don't know if it's II-compatible. There is a DOS emulator called SoftPC
- for $595 from Insignia (5.25" disk drive not included) that may be even
- better than the DOS board that's available. Come to think of it, though,
- I've got enough trouble without trying to buy/learn Apple II or DOS software.
-
- Literature:
- Reading is such an inexhaustable hobby! The following are recommended:
- Inside Macintosh and the associated tech notes, development system support
- docs, and user interface guidelines; Scott Knaster's How to Write Macintosh
- Software and Macintosh Programming Secrets; Addison Wesley's Introduction to
- Macintosh Family Hardware and Introduction to Macintosh Programming;
- Chernicoff's Macintosh Revealed; and the HyperCard Scripting book.
- Goodman's HyperCard Handbook was disrecommended by one respondent. (Maybe
- I need a thesarus program ...)
-
- Incidentally, there's a Small Computer Book Club that's offering
- Macintosh Programming Secrets, The Complete HyperCard Handbook,
- HyperTalk Programmers' Guide, and Programming with the Macintosh
- Programmer's Workshop for $4.95 + 3 purchases in 12 months. I don't
- know how long delivery takes.
-
- I should also subscribe to MacTutor Magazine (P.O. Box 400 (or 846?),
- Placentia, CA 92670; (714) 630-3730) and order the Best of MacTutor
- volumes 1 & 2 from them or from B. Dalton Bookstores - $30 each.
- I'm not sure if The Complete MacTutor Vol. 2 is the same thing.
- Anyway, MacTutor source code disks 1-25 are available for $8 each.
- I should also join the Apple Programmers' and Developers' Association
- (APDA) (290 SW 43rd Street, Renton, WA 98055) for $35 per year, and
- should investigate macserv@rice and macserv@irlearn as sources of code
- by sending an "index" command.
-
- There is a new monthly, Mac II Review, for $67 per year (240 Sunnyridge
- Ave., Bldg. 112-Dept. B, Fairfield, Conn. 06430; (203) 334-0334).
- MacWeek is free if you fill out their questionnaire. I see MacUser as
- a good user-oriented magazine, Macweek as more vendor-oriented. I haven't
- run across MacToday yet. There are a few articles in MicroTimes, Bay Area
- Computer Currents, Byte, etc. The Bay Area Users' Group (BMUG) publishes
- a 300-400 page newsletter twice a year.
-
- Education:
- No comments on Business Simulator, Chipwits, Puppy Love, MacRobots,
- Dinner at Eight, Japanese/Chinese tutorials, or other educational software.
- There is a MacFingerspeller for teaching American Sign Language (Microtech
- Consulting Co., Inc., 909 W. 23rd Street, Cedar Falls, Iowa 50613;
- (800) 992-SIGN; $29.95 for the talking version, $19.95 otherwise).
- I'm also told that there's an Esperanto stack and one for learning Spanish
- conjugations. Stackware seems to be developing as the premier source of
- preloaded databases.
-
- Music:
- Practica Musica runs on the Mac II, but Deluxe Music Construction Set
- doesn't. Studio Session 1.4 runs, but freezes on quit; use MultiFinder
- or another launcher to exit. No one contradicted my statement that
- Music Mouse won't run, and no one commented on Listen 2.0. (MIDI
- software doesn't run on the II yet because of a stack-length problem,
- but I'm not into MIDI yet anyway.)
-
- Games:
- Popular Mac II games are Beyond Dark Castle, Beyond Zork, Crystal Quest,
- ShadowGate, Lode Runner (despite what MacUser reported), and Sargon III.
- No one disputed that Balance of Power, Shanghai, Smash Hit Racquetball II,
- or Zork Trilogy would work. Uninvited and Deja Vu probabably work.
- MacGolf 3.0 is just now coming out. Wizardry runs, but not under
- MultiFinder. Chessmaster 2000 has some bugs, crashes on exit.
-
- I still have no information about II-compatibility for Battle Stations,
- Borrowed Time, Carmen San Diego, Down Hill Racer, Klondike, Mind Over Mac,
- Psion Chess, Quarterstaff (new version 1.2e), Real Poker, Seven Cities of Gold,
- or Trust and Betrayal.
-
- The Mac II cannot run Apache Strike, Dark Castle, Falcon, or OrbQuest.
- No one supported other games I said were not II-compatible: Archon,
- Ancient Art of War, Ferrari Grand Prix, Fokker Triplane, GATO,
- MS Flight Simulator, Ogre, Orbiter, Skyfox or Winter Games. Ultima III
- probably doesn't work.
-
- There are hundreds of public-domain games (e.g., Brickles on SUMEX);
- anybody got a catalog or description? I've noticed ads for companies
- distributing PD software for about $20 per disk -- I presume that the
- same programs are available over the networks, but finding them and
- selecting is a pain. Boston Computer Society was mentioned as one source
- of zillions of programs. I have access to those at SUMEX. We have some
- freeware at SRI (it took me 60 pages to list the files!), and I've been
- told that (201) 340-3531 is a good place to start accessing the 80-or-so
- PD bboards. Are there any good catalogs, handbooks, surveys, or descriptions
- available, or is it all word of mouth (and trial and error)? I'm sure a users'
- group is just what I need, so I'll investigate when I get to Washington DC.
-
- Vendors:
- No particular caveats except for shipping delays and old versions of
- software. MacConnection was praised by several, MacWAREHOUSE by one.
- MacConnection is indeed at or exceedingly near the cheapest price on
- almost every package that they advertised. (Possible exceptions
- are MicroPhone II, Coach, Cricket Draw and Graph, Egghead's special on
- PixelPaint, MORE 1.1c, ReadySetGo!, HyperBook Maker, Reports, Numerical
- Methods Tool Box, DiskFit 1.4, MacZap 5.0, QuicKeys, and MacSafe; even
- these might be due to version differences or to my comparing ads from
- different months.) I'm amazed that many stores can charge $10 to $100
- more than the nationally advertised price for every software package,
- even advertising in the same magazines. Of course, it's not fair to buy
- by mail and then expect service from a local store.
-
- I've just begun to look at the freeware available to me; it may take
- me years. I prefer to work with commercial packages, although I may
- change my mind when I become more familiar with the net (or when my
- wife takes away my checkbook). Someday I or my kids will get into the
- thrill of betaware testing, but for now I want no surprises. Incidentally,
- if any of you have packages you'd like to sell at a discount, now would
- be a good time to make me an offer.
-
- Well, thanks again. I hope this list is of use to others. The more
- Mac II hackers, the better.
-
- -- Ken
-
- ------------------------------
-
- End of INFO-MAC Digest
- **********************
-
- ACTION>